A small-cell lung cancer genome with complex signatures of tobacco exposure.
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Authors
Pleasance, Erin D
Stephens, Philip J
O'Meara, Sarah
McBride, David J
Meynert, Alison
Jones, David
Lin, Meng-Lay
Beare, David
Lau, King Wai
Greenman, Chris
Varela, Ignacio
Davies, Helen R
Ordoñez, Gonzalo R
Mudie, Laura J
Latimer, Calli
Edkins, Sarah
Stebbings, Lucy
Chen, Lina
Jia, Mingming
Leroy, Catherine
Marshall, John
Menzies, Andrew
Butler, Adam
Teague, Jon W
Mangion, Jonathon
Sun, Yongming A
McLaughlin, Stephen F
Peckham, Heather E
Tsung, Eric F
Costa, Gina L
Lee, Clarence C
Minna, John D
Gazdar, Adi
Birney, Ewan
Rhodes, Michael D
McKernan, Kevin J
Stratton, Michael R
Futreal, P Andrew
Campbell, Peter J
Publication Date
2010-01-14Journal Title
Nature
ISSN
0028-0836
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
463
Issue
7278
Pages
184-190
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Pleasance, E. D., Stephens, P. J., O'Meara, S., McBride, D. J., Meynert, A., Jones, D., Lin, M., et al. (2010). A small-cell lung cancer genome with complex signatures of tobacco exposure.. Nature, 463 (7278), 184-190. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature08629
Abstract
Cancer is driven by mutation. Worldwide, tobacco smoking is the principal lifestyle exposure that causes cancer, exerting carcinogenicity through >60 chemicals that bind and mutate DNA. Using massively parallel sequencing technology, we sequenced a small-cell lung cancer cell line, NCI-H209, to explore the mutational burden associated with tobacco smoking. A total of 22,910 somatic substitutions were identified, including 134 in coding exons. Multiple mutation signatures testify to the cocktail of carcinogens in tobacco smoke and their proclivities for particular bases and surrounding sequence context. Effects of transcription-coupled repair and a second, more general, expression-linked repair pathway were evident. We identified a tandem duplication that duplicates exons 3-8 of CHD7 in frame, and another two lines carrying PVT1-CHD7 fusion genes, indicating that CHD7 may be recurrently rearranged in this disease. These findings illustrate the potential for next-generation sequencing to provide unprecedented insights into mutational processes, cellular repair pathways and gene networks associated with cancer.
Keywords
Carcinogens, Cell Line, Tumor, DNA Copy Number Variations, DNA Damage, DNA Helicases, DNA Mutational Analysis, DNA Repair, DNA-Binding Proteins, Exons, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Genome, Human, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Mutagenesis, Insertional, Mutation, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Sequence Deletion, Small Cell Lung Carcinoma, Smoking, Tobacco
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature08629
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/280055
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Licence URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
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